Inter-observer agreement and sensitivity of Optomap images for screening peripheral retinal lesions in patients undergoing refractive surgery.
Optomap Daytona 200Tx
refractive surgery
ultrawide field imaging
Journal
Indian journal of ophthalmology
ISSN: 1998-3689
Titre abrégé: Indian J Ophthalmol
Pays: India
ID NLM: 0405376
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
Dec 2020
Dec 2020
Historique:
entrez:
24
11
2020
pubmed:
25
11
2020
medline:
15
5
2021
Statut:
ppublish
Résumé
The aim of this study was to compute the sensitivity, specificity and inter-reader variability of ultra-widefield retinal imaging (Optomap 200Tx) for screening retinal lesions before myopic refractive surgery. Two hundred and eight eyes of 109 consecutive refractive surgery candidates were included in this study. All subjects underwent Optomap 200Tx, mydriatic slit-lamp lens examination and dilated retinal examination with scleral indentation by a retinal specialist. Retinal findings by indirect dilated examination by retinal specialist was considered as the gold-standard. Sensitivity analyses for the readers were calculated between the Optomap images and the gold-standard retinal examination. Seventy-three of the 208 eyes (35.1%) had peripheral retinal lesions diagnosed by the retinal specialist on dilated fundus examination. Peripheral lesions were seen on the Optomap images in 111 (53.4%) eyes. Compared to the dilated retinal examination, the detection rate with the Optomap 200Tx was 78.1% and specificity rate was 60%. The accuracy rate between the 3 readers ranged from 72% to 87%. The highest accuracy was noted with the reader post 1 year of retinal training (86.54%). The Optomap 200Tx showed a high sensitivity and moderate specificity for identifying peripheral retinal lesions in eyes undergoing refractive surgery. The Optomap examination is a convenient, fast and feasible method for detecting the pathological fundus changes in myopic eyes. The reliability of the examination improves when the images are interpreted by a reader with prior retinal training.
Identifiants
pubmed: 33229672
pii: IndianJOphthalmol_2020_68_12_2930_301246
doi: 10.4103/ijo.IJO_2239_20
pmc: PMC7856983
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
2930-2934Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts
None
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